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Dive into the research topics where Alexander H. Vo is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander H. Vo.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2008

Post-combat invincibility : Violent combat experiences are associated with increased risk-taking propensity following deployment

William D. S. Killgore; Dave I. Cotting; Jeffrey L. Thomas; Anthony L. Cox; Dennis McGurk; Alexander H. Vo; Carl A. Castro; Charles W. Hoge

Combat exposure is associated with increased rates of mental health problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety when Soldiers return home. Another important health consequence of combat exposure involves the potential for increased risk-taking propensity and unsafe behavior among returning service members. Survey responses regarding 37 different combat experiences were collected from 1252 US Army Soldiers immediately upon return home from combat deployment during Operation Iraqi Freedom. A second survey that included the Evaluation of Risks Scale (EVAR) and questions about recent risky behavior was administered to these same Soldiers 3 months after the initial post-deployment survey. Combat experiences were reduced to seven factors using principal components analysis and used to predict post-deployment risk-propensity scores. Although effect sizes were small, specific combat experiences, including greater exposure to violent combat, killing another person, and contact with high levels of human trauma, were predictive of greater risk-taking propensity after homecoming. Greater exposure to these combat experiences was also predictive of actual risk-related behaviors in the preceding month, including more frequent and greater quantities of alcohol use and increased verbal and physical aggression toward others. Exposure to violent combat, human trauma, and having direct responsibility for taking the life of another person may alter an individuals perceived threshold of invincibility and slightly increase the propensity to engage in risky behavior upon returning home after wartime deployment. Findings highlight the importance of education and counseling for returning service members to mitigate the public health consequences of elevated risk-propensity associated with combat exposure.


Neurosurgery | 2006

Wartime traumatic cerebral vasospasm: Recent review of combat casualties

Rocco A. Armonda; Randy S. Bell; Alexander H. Vo; Geoffrey Ling; Thomas J. DeGraba; Benjamin Crandall; James Ecklund; William W. Campbell

OBJECTIVEBlast-related neurotrauma is associated with the severest casualties from Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). A consequence of this is cerebral vasospasm. This study evaluated all inpatient neurosurgical consults related to battle injury from OIF. METHODSEvaluation of all admissions from OIF from April 2003 to October 2005 was performed on patients with neurotrauma and a diagnostic cerebral angiogram. Differences between patients with and without vasospasm and predictors of vasospasm were analyzed. RESULTSFifty-seven out of 119 neurosurgical consults were evaluated. Of these, 47.4% had traumatic vasospasm; 86.7% of patients without vasospasm and 80.8% of patients with vasospasm sustained blast trauma. Average spasm duration was 14.3 days, with a range of up to 30 days. Vasospasm was associated with the presence of pseudoaneurysm (P = 0.05), hemorrhage (P = 0.03), the number of lobes injured (P = 0.012), and mortality (P = 0.029). Those with vasospasm fared worse than those without (P = 0.002). The number of lobes injured and the presence of pseudoaneurysm were significant predictors of vasospasm (P = 0.016 and 0.02, respectively). There was a significant quadratic trend towards neurological improvement for those receiving aggressive open surgical treatment (P = 0.002). In the vasospasm group, angioplasty with microballoon significantly lowered middle cerebral artery and basilar blood-flow velocities(P = 0.046 and 0.026, respectively). CONCLUSIONTraumatic vasospasm occurred in a substantial number of patients with severe neurotrauma, and clinical outcomes were worse for those with this condition. However, aggressive open surgical and endovascular treatment strategies may have improved outcome. This was the first study to analyze the effects of blast-related injury on the cerebral vasculature.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2009

Military traumatic brain and spinal column injury: a 5-year study of the impact blast and other military grade weaponry on the central nervous system.

Randy S. Bell; Alexander H. Vo; Chris J. Neal; June Tigno; Ryan Roberts; Corey Mossop; James R. Dunne; Rocco A. Armonda

BACKGROUND During the past 5 years of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), a significant majority of the severe closed and penetrating head trauma has presented for definitive care at the National Naval Medical Center (NNMC) in Bethesda, MD, and at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center (WRAMC) in Washington, DC. The purpose of this article is to review our experience with this population of patients. MATERIALS A retrospective review of all inpatient admissions from OIF was performed during a 5-year period (April 2003 to April 2008). Criteria for inclusion in this study included either a closed or penetrating head trauma suffered during combat operations in Iraq who subsequently received a neurosurgical evaluation at NNMC or WRAMC. Exclusion criteria included all patients for whom primary demographic data could not be verified. Primary outcome data included the type and mechanism of injury, Glasgow coma scale (GCS) and injury severity score at admission, and Glasgow outcome scale (GOS) at discharge, 6 months, and 1 to 2 years. RESULTS Five hundred thirteen consultations were performed by the neurosurgery service on the aforementioned population. Four hundred eight patients met the inclusion criteria for this study (401:7, male: female; 228 penetrating brain injury, 139 closed head injury, 41 not specified). Explosive blast injury (229 patients; 56%) constituted the predominant mechanism of injury. The rates of pulmonary embolism (7%), cerebrospinal fluid leak (8.6%), meningitis (9.1%), spinal cord or column injury (9.8%), and cerebrovascular injury (27%) were characterized. Cerebrospinal fluid leak, vasospasm, penetrating head injury, and lower presenting GCS were statistically associated with longer intensive care unit stays and higher presenting injury severity scores (p < 0.05). While presenting GCS 3-5 correlated with worsened short-term and long-term GOS scores (p < 0.001), almost half of these patients achieved GOS >or=3 at 1- to 2-year follow-up. Total mortality after reaching NNMC/WRAMC was 4.4%. CONCLUSIONS OIF has resulted in the highest concentration of severe closed and penetrating head trauma to return to NNMC and WRAMC since the Vietnam Conflict. Management scenarios were complex, incorporating principles designed to maximize outcomes in all body systems. Meaningful survival can potentially be achieved in a subset of patients with presenting GCS <or=5.


Neurosurgery | 2010

Wartime traumatic aneurysms: acute presentation, diagnosis, and multimodal treatment of 64 craniocervical arterial injuries.

Randy S. Bell; Alexander H. Vo; Ryan Roberts; John Wanebo; Rocco A. Armonda

OBJECTIVEOperation Iraqi Freedom has resulted in a significant number of closed and penetrating head injuries, and a consequence of both has been the accompanying neurovascular injuries. Here we review the largest reported population of patients with traumatic neurovascular disease and offer our experience with both endovascular and surgical management. METHODSA retrospective analysis of all military casualties returning to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, from April 2003 until April 2008 was performed. All patients undergoing diagnostic cerebral angiography during their inpatient stay were included in the study. RESULTSA total of 513 war trauma-related consults were performed from April 2003 to April 2008, resulting in the evaluation of 408 patients with closed and penetrating head injuries. In this population, 279 angiographic studies were performed in 187 patients (25 closed craniocervical injuries, 162 penetrating craniocervical injuries), resulting in the detection of 64 vascular injuries in 48 patients (26.2% of those studied, 34% prevalence). Vascular injuries were characterized by traumatic intracranial aneurysms (TICAs) (n = 31), traumatic extracalvarial aneurysms (TECAs) (n = 19), arterial dissections (n = 11), and arteriovenous fistulae (n = 3). The average TICA size on admission was 4.1 mm, with an observed increase in aneurysm size in 11 cases. In the TICA/TECA group, 24 aneurysms in 23 patients were treated endovascularly with either coiling or stent-assisted coiling, resulting in preservation of the parent artery in 12 of 24 vessels (50%). The injuries in 3 patients in this group progressed despite endovascular treatment and required definitive clip exclusion. Thirteen additional aneurysms in 8 patients were treated surgically, resulting in parent artery preservation in 4 cases (30.8%). Eleven of the 13 remaining TICAs/TECAs resolved spontaneously without treatment. A total of 6 aneurysm ruptures (average size, 8.25 mm) occurred, resulting in 3 deaths. Four of 6 ruptures occurred in TICAs in which the interval size increase was noted angiographically. CONCLUSIONThe management of traumatic vascular injury has evolved with technological advancement and the willingness of the neurosurgeon to intervene. Although open surgical intervention remains a viable solution, endovascular options are available and safe and can effectively temporize a patient while acute sequelae of serious head injury resolve.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2002

Reliability of measurements of patient health status: a comparison of physician, patient, and caregiver ratings.

Cynthia McRae; Gretchen Diem; Alexander H. Vo; Christopher O'Brien; Lauren Seeberger

The purpose of this preliminary study was to investigate the inter-rater reliability among physician, patient, and caregiver ratings on the Hoehn & Yahr (H & Y) and Schwab & England (S & E) rating instruments. We also examined differences in ratings between patients who attended clinic with and without caregivers (spouses and adult children). Patients and caregivers coming for an appointment at Colorado Neurological Institute were asked to independently complete the H & Y and S & E scales. Physicians rated the patients during the exam. In the group of patients who came to clinic with caregivers, there was significant agreement on both the H & Y and S & E (P<0.001). For patients not accompanied by caregivers, patients rated themselves as more debilitated on the S & E than physicians (P<0.001). Patients without caregivers rated themselves as more functional than patients with caregivers on both scales (P<0.001). Physicians also rated patients without caregivers as more functional on both scales (P<0.001). Results indicated there was consistency among ratings of physicians and patients accompanied by caregivers on both scales. Patients attending clinic alone rated themselves as worse on the S & E than physicians. Patients alone were rated as more functional than patients accompanied by caregivers on both scales regardless of rater.


Neurology | 2007

MODAFINIL FOR TREATMENT OF FATIGUE IN POST-POLIO SYNDROME: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL

Olavo M. Vasconcelos; Olga A. Prokhorenko; Mohammad Salajegheh; K. F. Kelley; K. Livornese; Cara H. Olsen; Alexander H. Vo; Marinos C. Dalakas; L. S. Halstead; Bahman Jabbari; William W. Campbell

Objective: To determine if modafinil can improve fatigue in patients with post-polio syndrome. Methods: We used a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial. Intervention with modafinil (400 mg/day) and placebo occurred over 6-week periods. Primary endpoint (fatigue) was assessed using the Fatigue Severity Scale as the main outcome measure. Other measures included the Visual Analog Scale for Fatigue and the Fatigue Impact Scale. Secondary endpoint (health-related quality of life) was assessed using the 36-Item Short-Form. Analysis of variance for repeated measures was applied to assess treatment, period, and carryover effects. Results: Thirty-six patients were randomized, 33 of whom (mean age: 61 years) completed required interventions. Treatment with modafinil was safe and well-tolerated. After adjusting for periods and order effects, no difference was observed between treatments. Conclusion: Based on the utilized measures of outcome modafinil was not superior to placebo in alleviating fatigue or improving quality of life in the studied post-polio syndrome population.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2003

Early and pre-symptomatic neuropsychological dysfunction in the PPND family with the N279K tau mutation

Tanis J. Ferman; Cynthia McRae; Zoe Arvanitakis; Yoshio Tsuboi; Alexander H. Vo; Zbigniew K. Wszolek

The N279K mutation on the tau gene of chromosome 17 leads to an inherited condition that involves pallido-ponto-nigral degeneration (PPND). Patients with PPND develop dementia, but the pattern and onset of cognitive dysfunction has not yet been delineated. Four affected patients underwent neurocognitive evaluation within the first 2 years of PPND motor onset; one of whom underwent five serial neurocognitive evaluations, and another who was not diagnosed with PPND until the third annual evaluation. Impaired letter fluency was found in the early stages of PPND and was also shown to precede the onset of motor symptoms by 2 years. Trail Making A (visual scanning and motor speed) and Trail Making B (divided attention) were impaired within the first 2 years of the disease in all but one patient, but this individual showed clinically significant decline on these tasks by the third year of the disease. Learning, memory, and timed visuospatial sequencing skills were variably affected. Results reveal disproportionate frontal-executive dysfunction early in PPND disease course, a pattern similar to what has been reported in other FTDP-17 kindreds and in sporadic PSP. In addition, results suggest that letter fluency may be a sensitive predictor of incipient PPND.


Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2014

A Lexicon of Assessment and Outcome Measures for Telemental Health

Jay H. Shore; Matt C. Mishkind; Jordana Bernard; Charles R. Doarn; Iverson Bell; Rajiv Bhatla; Elizabeth Brooks; Robert Caudill; Ellen Cohn; Barthold J. Delphin; Antonio Eppolito; John C. Fortney; Karl Friedl; Phil Hirsch; Patricia J. Jordan; Thomas J. Kim; David D. Luxton; Michael D. Lynch; Marlene M. Maheu; Francis L. McVeigh; Eve-Lynn Nelson; Chuck Officer; Patrick T. O'Neil; Lisa Roberts; Colleen Rye; Carolyn Turvey; Alexander H. Vo

BACKGROUND The purpose of this document is to provide initial recommendations to telemental health (TMH) professionals for the selection of assessment and outcome measures that best reflect the impacts of mental health treatments delivered via live interactive videoconferencing. MATERIALS AND METHODS The guidance provided here was created through an expert consensus process and is in the form of a lexicon focused on identified key TMH outcomes. RESULTS Each lexical item is elucidated by a definition, recommendations for assessment/measurement, and additional commentary on important considerations. The lexicon is not intended as a current literature review of the field, but rather as a resource to foster increased dialogue, critical analysis, and the development of the science of TMH assessment and evaluation. The intent of this lexicon is to better unify the TMH field by providing a resource to researchers, program managers, funders, regulators and others for assessing outcomes. CONCLUSIONS This document provides overall context for the key aspects of the lexicon.


Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2010

University of Texas Medical Branch telemedicine disaster response and recovery: lessons learned from hurricane Ike.

Alexander H. Vo; George B. Brooks; Michael Bourdeau; Ralph Farr; Benny G Raimer

Despite previous efforts and expenditure of tremendous resources on creating and simulating disaster response scenarios, true disaster response, specifically for healthcare, has been inadequate. In addition, none of the >200 local and statewide telemedicine programs in the United States has ever responded to a large-scale disaster, let alone, experienced one directly. Based on its experience with hurricanes Rita and, most recently, Ike, the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) experienced its most challenging trials. Although there were significant disruptions to a majority of UTMBs physical and operational infrastructures, its telemedicine services were able to resume near normal activities within the first week of the post-Ike recovery period, an unimaginable feat in the face of such remarkable devastation. This was primarily due in part to the flexibility of its data network, the rapid response, and plasticity of its telemedicine program. UTMBs experiences in providing rapid and effective medical services in the face of such a disaster offer valuable lessons for local, state, and national disaster preparations, policy, and remote medical delivery models and programs.


Journal of Neurology | 2003

Does personality change as a result of fetal tissue transplantation in the brain

Cynthia McRae; Eva Cherin; Gretchen Diem; Alexander H. Vo; J. Heiner Ellgring; Daniel W. Russell; Stanley Fahn; Curt R. Freed

Abstract. This study examined the effects on personality of transplantation of fetal tissue into the brains of participants in a double-blind placebo control trial for the treatment of Parkinsons disease (PD). Thirty persons with PD (equal numbers of males and females) participated in a larger study investigating the efficacy of transplantation of fetal neural tissue versus placebo surgery. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either the fetal transplant or placebo surgery. The blind was lifted for all patients approximately 13 months after surgery, at which time individuals who had received the placebo surgery could choose to receive the transplant surgery. In this study 12 persons originally received the transplant and 18 received placebo surgery. The NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI), a commonly used measure of personality characteristics, was administered to participants at baseline, 12, and 24 months after surgery. Scores at baseline for the Openness and Agreeableness scales were significantly higher for this sample of PD patients than scores for the normative group. There were no changes on any of the five scales from baseline to 12 months for the total group. The only significant change in the original transplant group was a decrease in Conscientiousness from baseline to 24 months. There were no changes over time among the group who had placebo surgery first and then the transplant. Results indicate that personality, as measured by the NEO-FFI, basically remained stable during the two-year follow-up period of this study. In this case, no change is regarded as a positive outcome.

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Randy S. Bell

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Rocco A. Armonda

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center

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William W. Campbell

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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James Ecklund

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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Jay H. Shore

University of Colorado Denver

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Ryan Roberts

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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Geoffrey Ling

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Marshall R. Thomas

University of Colorado Denver

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